With ongoing challenges in recruitment and retention of employees, I think it’s a good time of year to check in with how your employees are feeling about their work with your company… and what’s ‘next’ for them – and you.
The challenge with starting to explore ‘what’s next’ with your younger team members (Gen Z, the under 25’s in particular), is that without being properly prepared, you might be opening up questions with them for which you haven’t yet developed great answers. This column provides a glance into a framework worth considering to help you have that ‘what’s next’ discussion successfully.
When working with a coaching client on developing career paths recently, I realized that many employers simply either haven’t yet or don’t know how to chart a path for employees to follow.
To help you chart that path, I want to throw out a company structure idea: Agile Cooperative vs Top Down Hierarchy. An agile cooperative is a type of company structure, where the responsibilities of each person are very clear, and different people make different types or ‘levels’ of decisions based on skills and knowledge (capability). Instead of the ‘top down’ structure where information mostly ‘flows down’ to the field workers / labourers, think more of a wheel with spokes than an organizational chart with different levels of seniority. In an agile cooperative, the number of years of tenure rarely equate to a raise or promotion. Raises are tied to merit, skill, knowledge etc.
Charting out an employee pathway starts with first being crystal clear on what their (or any) company position requires for skills and knowledge. In addition, it’s also pretty tough to entice young workers to stay when they haven’t yet realized that there are three key ingredients to earning more money or responsibility: 1. Skills. 2. Knowledge. 3. Will. Having just two of the three doesn’t cut it.
To keep the people you have, they need to know ‘what’s in it for me if I stay? My answer to that is typically something like: “Well, that’s pretty much up to you”.
With clear job descriptions that describe each role, the responsibilities, the required results of effort, the skills and qualifications – then you can show the path forward (note – I didn’t say ‘ the path upwards’). Here’s an example (with very approximate* pay rate ranges):
Click on image to enlarge.
The movement between positions is intended to be lateral, not upwards.
My premise for this is simple: when you realize who Gen Z is, and why they think the way they do, it’s easy: They don’t want to start at the bottom. None of us do or ever did, but many of us ‘had to’ and worked hard to ‘move up’. Gen Z simply have more options and resources at their finger tips than each of the generations before them and they are impatient – they don’t want to start at the bottom. They are looking for psychological safety, fairness and opportunity. When you can teach them that SKILLS + KNOWLEDGE = OPPORTUNITY, that could well be the glue that encourages them to stay.
Employees can’t gain either if they keep moving around job to job. You need to convince them of that.
A more challenging economic environment is now perched on our doorstep. When companies start to feel consumers pull back from spending, then ‘newer’ employees are let go first. Talking to your team about staying – so that they avoid becoming a victim of downsizing – is a worthy conversation.
The reality is that without a clear path, there’s a lot of great young workers who have lost hope, who feel adrift, and who are restless, often believing at a different job, it will be better. However, when they can see a way forward with your company and have the reassurance that there is a ‘safe’ journey where they will be respected, valued and be appreciated for their contribution no matter what job title they have, your company will be more STICKY.
STICKY means keeping the team players you need, and having an engaged team with the WILL to work hard, be dependable, learn, grow and improve their opportunities. The tide will start to turn a bit more in favour of employers in the months/year ahead I’m fairly certain. What will you do to be ready and well equipped , encouraging your staff to stay, learn, engage and grow with your team?